Tools for Parenting Well

I’m speaking for a baby shower this week. I thought of a lot of different angles I could take, including highlighting mothers in the Bible. But in the end I decided to approach my talk from the perspective of tools that are useful on your parenting journey. These tools are applicable to all of life and so I am sharing them here with you.

When you are a professional, you have tools that are essential to your trade. You were trained in how to use them—and then you set forth to do so. The same is true in parenting, that is, in parenting well. First off, it helps to know where you’re heading before you begin to use your tools.

Keep the End Game in Mind

Know the end game–where you’re heading with your parenting. Then figure out what will get you there. A Christian home takes Christian parenting. You are putting into your child at all times. It helps to know what you will need before you need it!

Love is Essential

Love makes a way. Love blesses. Love cares for needs even when you’re tired. Love get you through the terrible twos, potty training, and each and every day. Love even loves a teenager who’s giving you sass.

Incorporate Laughter

Humor makes your home fun. Pastor Pete liked to say, “Are you fun to live with?” We can be too serious at times. Lighten up. Enjoy your child. Look for the humor in situations. But do be careful with sarcasm that cuts.

Encourage Healthy Self-Concepts

Validate your child. Accept his or her uniqueness. Play to their strengths. Be sensitive to their fears. Refrain from belittling them when they are afraid. Minimize comparisons. Strive to know your child as a person, especially as they enter their own. Some parents do this extremely well, and those parents stand out. Some fail miserably. Be careful with the criticisms. A child’s spirit is easily bruised.

Pray Often

Prayer is a resource always available to you. We pray for our child’s protection. We pray for their spiritual life, their salvation and growth. We pray when they’re sick. We pray, pray, and pray. Our prayers broaden as our children grow into adulthood. As our parenting role lessens, we are letting go, letting them make their own decisions as we are simultaneously praying for them to make wise choices.

Give Thanks and Be Grateful

Along with prayer, we give thanks to God. We develop a spirit of gratitude. We turn negative situations into a cause for giving thanks. This turns negatives into positives and eases tensions in the home. Our homes reflect the gratefulness of our hearts.

Speak Words of Praise in All Things

God tells us to give praise in all things, which means both good and bad. The amazing thing about giving God praise in all things is what God does with our prayers of praise. He acts on our praises. I’m just learning this one and what a difference it makes.

Teach the Best Things

Parents teach. We teach about God and spiritual matters. We teach about the world and our relationship to it. We teach by example. It is wise to examine our views on matters of race, belonging, gender identity, and topics close to home. We teach about being good citizens, how to be a good sport, how to treat people right, and how to work hard and do it right. We teach how to care, love, affirm, and help. We are constantly teaching our children how to view the world they live in.

Shape Your Child’s Life for Real Life

We as parents are given an awesome responsibility. Train up a child in the way he should go and when he is old he will not depart from it. Discipline is part of this. Structure is part of this. Guidance is part of this. Love is part of this. Children respond to judicious use of all of these.

However, it doesn’t work too well to hover and smother … helicopter parenting–they are over-protecting. Nor does it work well to not have limits or boundaries … where the children are calling the shots and manipulating you. Teach them to listen to you–which helps them respect you. Obedience follows. We are also learning to listen to God. Then we are more apt to obey Him as we should.

Most importantly, refrain from being harsh, punitive, and controlling–this is your responsibility. Children do not forget when you’ve been unreasonable or unfair.

In Conclusion

Children are gifts from God. Treat them as such. They are blessings and joys, and they are vessels to be filled. Fill them with love, goodness, and grace.

May the Lord bless you and keep you. May His face shine on you, and your children, and your children’s children.

Selah

Photo Credit – Chris Benson, Unsplash

Resurrection & Life

One lone daffodil blooms in my yard. Bright yellow tulips will soon follow as they gloriously lift their heads in spring’s emergence. Just weeks ago the honeyed scent of almond blossoms marked its beginning. Newness is here, again.

The spring season unfolds as plants awaken to living and growing. We observe its miracle. The refrain is as familiar as it is repetitive. We’re living it too. We are born, grow, learn, and produce. Then all too soon we are looking back instead of forward.

We marvel at the miraculous. Cycles come and go – and we come and go with them. Life hails from beginnings to endings. Employment starts, then ends. We stretch to achieve, then ride the wave. We try new things, then leave them behind. We plant, grow, and harvest, in season and out.

Easter tells of a holy resurrection that happened during the season of new beginnings and fresh starts. Jesus came, lived, taught, and died. Everyone was talking about it. But the grave could not hold Him. Jesus Christ arose to life, victorious over death.

In the little things we see the big things. How fruit matures after a season of growing is like how a person overcomes and then reawakens. Everyone overcomes. This includes those difficult parts we seldom talk about. Life cycles in a form of death and then rebirth.

Jesus went from death to life that we might have life in Him, which is why we sorrow, then celebrate. His death, then life. Jesus said, “I am the way, the truth, and the life.” If there were not life in Christ, what good would the way and truth be? Life in Christ is the essence of the resurrection.

Christ gives hope in the hard times, help in the uncertain times, and love in the dark times. We emerge stronger in our beings having gone through the valley experience.

My friend lost her home in the Camp Fire, but she has gone on to experience community in another place. God has helped her with this unwelcome, unforeseeable journey. She rebirthed physically. She is also a child of God. She is born again spiritually.

Lives are made joyous through the living Lord. Wait for the resurrection from loss to life during troublesome times. Live the resurrection life. Rejoice. Sing the Easter song.

Happy Resurrection Day!